See, that's your speculation. It's not necessarily true. You don't have any evidence to say "Real exam wins." Every MCAT is different. Questions and passages change. Many AAMC practice exams were old test questions. So I'd argue practice exams provide the same advantage that you are describing, which is it allows you to know your strength and weakness.
but it's not speculation. Real exam is better than practice exams. You can google this. I really don't have time to argue these type of semantics. It should be common sense right now. Real exams are AAMC materials...and AAMC does not release alot of practice exams. The guy that is retaking will always have +1 attempt on official AAMC questions and materials....and on top of that knows how he performed and can tailor his studies for the 2nd attempt. The guy that only took the mcat once does not have this luxury.
How many practice exams does AAMC release for the new MCAT? not many. The guy that is retaking has a whole extra attempt on a full length of official AAMC material. That's a huge advantage to me.
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